On Fri, Jan 9, 2009 at 12:27 PM, Giuseppe Fuggiano <giuseppe.fuggiano@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Hi list. > > I recently installed Fedora and today I got a little time after work > to configure it on my laptop. The first thing I did was configure the > network to access to the internet and to my LAN at home. To test the > connection I used netcat to listen to a dummy port, as I usually do. > The thing I discovered is that nc on Fedora has a different manpage, a > different binary and almost different syntax. Fedora's package uses the nc codebase from openBSD. rpm -qi nc We package things with the upstream project url encoded in the header information so you know exactly where the sourcecode base is coming from in our packages. Do the other distributions you use do they same? Do you know where the upstream source distribution of their netcat package is? Is there another actively maintained netcat upstream project codebase that you were expecting to find? My understanding is that that the netcat 1.10 version that some other distros ship..is a dead upstream project. If I'm mistaken, please let me know where it is. rpm -q --changelog nc and you find this: * Thu Mar 31 2005 Radek Vokal <rvokal@xxxxxxxxxx> 1.77-1 - switching to new OpenBSD version of netcat The switch to OpenBSD's actively maintained netcat codebase was made in March 2005. > > Why?! > > On every other distribution nc is the same and has the same syntax. Because we think its appropriate to track upstream project releases as much as is reasonable. Holding netcat at an old release version for cross 'linux' distro compatibility isn't necessarily inline with that, neither is holding onto codebases with a dead codebase for several years when there is an alternative and active upstream to migrate to. -jef -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines